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GENERAL AUDIENCE OF 28 JULY 1982
At the general audience in St Peter's Square on Wednesday, 28 July, the Holy Father began a new phase of his catechesis on the theology of the body, drawing from St. Paul's Letter to the Ephesians to begin a series of talks on matrimony.
1. Today we begin a new chapter on the subject of marriage, reading the words
of St. Paul to the Ephesians:
"Wives, be subject to your husbands as to the Lord. For the husband is the
head of the wife as Christ is the head of the Church, his body, and is himself
its savior. As the Church is subject to Christ, so let wives also be subject in
everything to their husbands.
Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the Church and gave himself up for
her, that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water
with the word, that he might present the Church to himself in splendor, without
spot or wrinkle or any such thing, that she might be holy and without blemish.
Even so husbands should love their wives as their own bodies. He who loves his
wife loves himself. For no man ever hates his own flesh, but nourishes and
cherishes it, as Christ does the Church, because we are members of his body.
'For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his
wife, and the two shall become one.' This is a great mystery, and I mean in
reference to Christ and the Church. However, let each one of you love his wife
as himself, and let the wife see that she respects her husband" (Eph
5:21-33).
Simple and fundamental
2. We should now subject to deep analysis the quoted text contained in this
fifth chapter of the Letter to the Ephesians, just as we have previously
analyzed the individual words of Christ that seem to have a key significance for
the theology of the body. The analysis dealt with the words with which Christ
recalled the beginning (cf. Mt 19:4; Mk 10:6), the human heart, in the Sermon on
the Mount (cf. Mt 5:28), and the future resurrection (cf. Mt 22:30; Mk 12:25; Lk
20:35). What is contained in the passage of the Letter to the Ephesians
constitutes almost a crowning of those other concise key words. The theology of
the body has emerged from them along its evangelical lines, simple and at the
same time fundamental. In a certain sense it is necessary to presuppose that
theology in interpreting the above-mentioned passage of the Letter to the
Ephesians. Therefore if we want to interpret that passage, we must do so in the
light of what Christ told us about the human body. He spoke not only to remind
historical man, and therefore man himself, who is always contemporary, about
concupiscence (in his heart). But he also spoke to reveal, on the one hand, the
prospectives of the beginning or original innocence or justice, and on the other
hand, the eschatological prospectives of the resurrection of the body, when
"They will neither marry nor be given in marriage" (cf. Lk 20:35). All
of this is part of the theological viewpoint of the "redemption of our
body" (Rom 8:23).
Meanings converge
3. Even the words of the author of the Letter to the Ephesians(1) are
centered on the body, both its metaphorical meaning, namely the Body of Christ
which is the Church, and its concrete meaning, namely the human body in its
perennial masculinity and femininity, in its perennial destiny for union in
marriage, as Genesis says: "The man will leave his father and his mother
and will cling to his wife and the two will be one flesh" (Gn 2:24).
In what way do these two meanings of the body appear together and converge in
the passage of the Letter to the Ephesians? Why do they appear together and
converge there? We must ask these questions, expecting not so much immediate and
direct answers, but possibly studied and long-term answers for which our
previous analyses have prepared. In fact, that passage from the Letter to the
Ephesians cannot be correctly understood except in the full biblical context,
considering it as the crowning of the themes and truths which, through the Word
of God revealed in Sacred Scripture, ebb and flow like long waves. They are
central themes and essential truths. Therefore the quoted text from the Letter
to the Ephesians is also a key and classic text.
4. This text is well known in the liturgy, in which it always appears in
relation to the sacrament of marriage. The Church's lex orandi sees in it
an explicit reference to this sacrament, and the lex orandi presupposes
and at the same time always expresses the lex credendi. Admitting this
premise, we must immediately ask ourselves: in this classic text of the Letter
to the Ephesians, how does the truth about the sacramentality of marriage
emerge? In what way is it expressed and confirmed there? It will become clear
that the answers to these questions cannot be immediate and direct, but gradual
and long-term. This is proved even at a first glance at this text, which brings
us back to Genesis and therefore to "the beginning." In the
description of the relationship between Christ and the Church, this text takes
from the writings of the Old Testament prophets the well-known analogy of the
spousal love between God and his chosen people. Without examining these
relationships it would be difficult to answer the question about how the
sacramentality of marriage is dealt with in the Letter to the Ephesians. We will
also see how the answer we are seeking must pass through the whole sphere of the
questions previously analyzed, that is, through the theology of the body.
Body enters into definition of sacrament
5. The sacrament or the sacramentality—in
the more general sense of this term—meets
with the body and presupposes the theology of the body. According to the
generally known meaning, the sacrament is a visible sign. The body also
signifies that which is visible. It signifies the visibility of the world and of
man. Therefore, in some way, even if in the most general way, the body enters
the definition of sacrament, being "a visible sign of an invisible
reality," that is, of the spiritual, transcendent, divine reality. In this
sign—and
through this sign—God
gives himself to man in his transcendent truth and in his love. The sacrament is
a sign of grace, and it is an efficacious sign. Not only does the sacrament
indicate grace and express it in a visible way, but it also produces it. The
sacrament effectively contributes to having grace become part of man, and to
realizing and fulfilling in him the work of salvation, the work begun by God
from all eternity and fully revealed in Jesus Christ.
6. I would say that already this first glance at the classic text of the Letter
to the Ephesians points out the direction in which our further analyses must be
developed. It is necessary that these analyses begin with the preliminary
understanding of the text itself. However, they must subsequently lead us, so to
say, beyond their limits, in order to understand possibly to the very depths how
much richness of the truth revealed by God is contained in the scope of that
wonderful page. Using the well-known expression from Gaudium et Spes, we
can say that the passage we have selected from the Letter to the Ephesians,
"reveals—in
a particular way—man
to man, and makes him aware of his lofty vocation" (GS 22), inasmuch as he
shares in the experience of the incarnate person. In fact, creating man in his
image, from the very beginning God created him "male and female" (Gn
1:27).
During the subsequent analyses we will try—above
all in the light of the quoted text from the Letter to the Ephesians—to
more deeply understand the sacrament (especially marriage as a sacrament), first
in the dimension of the covenant and grace, and afterward in the dimension of
the sacramental sign.
NOTE
1) The question of Pauline authorship of the Letter to the Ephesians,
acknowledged by some exegetes and denied by others, can be resolved by means of
a median supposition which we accept here as a working hypothesis: namely, that
St. Paul entrusted some concepts to his secretary, who then developed and
refined them.
We have in mind this provisional solution of the question when we speak of
"the author of the Letter to the Ephesians," the "Apostle,"
and "St. Paul."
Taken from: L'OSSERVATORE ROMANO - English Edition -- Reprinted with Permission -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana - The Holy See